"Insult to assembly": Karnataka Minister Priyank Kharge slams Governor for refusing to deliver customary address
Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], January 22 (ANI): Karnataka Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Minister Priyank Kharge on Thursday termed the refusal of Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot to deliver the customary address to the Assembly as an insult to the Assembly and to the people of the state.
He also criticised the Governor for walking out before the national anthem was completed.
Kharge said, "It is unfortunate what stand the governor has taken and like I said before. The speech was not fiction; it had nothing against the centre governor. Only the facts were there, but the governor chose not to speak the people's language, and more importantly, he was in such a hurry that he didn't even wait for the national anthem to be completed."
Citing the previous incident involving the Tamil Nadu governor, he said, "Now, the entire BJP was commenting the day before on what happened with the Tamil Nadu governor, so what does this make the Governor, and what does the BJP have to say about it now?"
Kharge attacked the BJP MLAs in the Assembly for supporting the act and for not listening to what the governor has done. He termed the incident not only "unprecedented" but also "unfortunate".
Claiming Governor's action as an insult to the national anthem, Kharge said that there are processes and procedures in the assembly when there is an insult to the national anthem, for which he said that a request has been addressed to the Speaker, UT Khader Fareed, to provide the ruling.
Earlier in the day, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah strongly criticised Governor Gehlot for refusing to deliver the customary address to the Assembly, calling the move a "violation of the Constitution" and stating that the government is examining whether to approach the Supreme Court over the matter.
Siddaramaiah said that the Governor's move violates Article 163 (a Council of Ministers, led by the Chief Minister, shall aid and advise the Governor, who must generally act on this advice except when exercising their specific discretionary powers) and Article 176 (the Governor must deliver a "Special Address" to the State Legislature at the start of the first session after each general election and at the beginning of the first session of every year).
Next Story